Lukewarm approach to typhoid outbreak slammed

HEALTH stakeholders are deeply agitated by the lukewarm approach being shown by both the government and local authorities in addressing the typhoid outbreak that has so far officially claimed nine lives in Gweru and Masvingo.
BY PHYLLIS MBANJE

Itai Rusike

The outbreak has, however, spread to other parts of the country, with new cases being reported in Kadoma.
“There is need for a serious public campaign for local authorities to deliver safe water. Our water sources are contaminated. What are we doing about it?” Fungisayi Dube from the Citizens Health Watch (CHW) asked.
She said the new local authorities had a mandate to step up and eradicate typhoid and to be open about the situation with the water system so that necessary measures can be taken.
“The water should be tested. We need a proper report on the quality of water,” Dube said.
Community Working Group on Health (CWGH) director Itai Rusike (pictured) said it was disturbing that the outbreak of water-borne diseases such as typhoid and cholera was no longer a new phenomenon in Zimbabwe.
“It is even more disturbing when the authorities take over a month to officially acknowledge the problem, and let alone try to address it,” Rusike said.
Masvingo has been facing serious water challenges, a situation which is conducive for the outbreak of waterborne diseases like typhoid.
Some parts of Kadoma have gone for more than 20 years without running water and in June, the local authority said they needed about $4 million to address the challenge.
“This care-free approach to human life should not and cannot be tolerated and it is a clear indication of the levels of disdain the government has on the ordinary poor Zimbabweans. The Community Working Group on Health is deeply depressed by the lackadaisical approach being shown by both,” Rusike said.
He said the Health ministry, despite being the custodian of the Public Health Act, continued to act as if the situation was normal even in the wake of nine deaths.
“As CWGH, we urge the Health ministry, Gweru City Council and other stakeholders to quickly find common ground and tackle this health crisis,” he said.
The stakeholders have, however, welcomed the signing into law of the revised Public Health Act by President Emmerson Mnangagwa to replace the old and outdated 1924 Public Health Act.
“Local authorities and companies in the country were taking advantage of the gaps and weaknesses of the colonial enacted Act to continue polluting water bodies because it is cheaper to pollute and pay than dispose raw sewer and industrial waste appropriately,” Rusike said.

Drug shortages: The dynamics

Drug shortages: The dynamics

Paidamoyo Chipunza Senior Health Reporter
In recent months, Zimbabwe has experienced a shortage of one of the most critical drugs for the management of tuberculosis (TB) in its first two months of diagnosis. This tablet, a combination of rifampicin, isoniazid, pyrazinamide and ethambutol tablets, also known as FDC-RHZE is imported, costs of which are wholly supported by a development partner.
Oxytocin is another tablet whose availability is also supported by development partners working with Government in reducing pregnancy related deaths.
It is used to control bleeding after birth, among other uses. Of late, this drug has also been in short supply.
These two medicines are typical examples of supply of critical drugs in the public health sector, where sole responsibility to provide some essential services has been assumed by donors, posing not only repercussions on patients’ road to recovery, but also a serious security threat to the country.
“My sister was diagnosed of TB a month ago at Mufakose Clinic in Harare. I’ve been going with her to collect her drugs weekly until recently when we were told that the drugs were out of stock.
“We went to Kambuzuma, Glen View and Budiriro clinics and the story was the same. We also went as far as Domboshava, but still didn’t get anything,” said Pretty Mandaza from Mufakose who is taking care of her sister.
She said last Saturday they went back to Makumbe Hospital, where they were only given a week’s supply.
“If one skips treatment for three consecutive days, they have to restart the whole two months course for it to be effective. My sister skipped her medication for more than three days now, meaning she is supposed to restart the treatment again.
“We have however, resolved not to give her this one week’s supply until we get enough medication because if her course is further interrupted, she will need to restart again,” further explained Ms Mandaza.
She said her sister’s condition had also deteriorated in the past weeks and they were now afraid that the TB bacteria could easily be passed on to other family members since she is no longer on treatment.
Ms Mandaza said they also feared that her sister would develop the drug resistant strain of TB which is difficult, expensive and takes longer to treat.
Without medical intervention TB is highly contagious and interrupted uptake of medication increase one’s chances of developing resistance to medication.
Deputy director of the Aids and Tuberculosis Unit in the Ministry of Health and Child Care, Dr Charles Sandi said the country needed at least $1,5 million for medicines to respond to drug sensitive TB and an additional $1 million for drug resistant TB.
Sadly, these medicines are currently funded by donors.
“We continue advocating for allocation of resources towards TB programming from our local resources so that donors come in only to complement our efforts not the other way round,” said Dr Sandi.
He said the challenge with relying on donors was that they procure from pharmaceuticals who meet certain standards, which are guaranteed by World Health Organisation accreditation.
“While we have no problems with the insistence on good quality medicines, the implication of this practice is that when the accredited pharmaceuticals have issues with their suppliers,which might impact on production processes, it also affects the whole supply chain resulting in shortages of the medicines such as those that we were experiencing in the past weeks,” said Dr Sandi.
In response to the current shortages, Government has availed US$500 000 from the Health Levy as a mitigatory measure to procure the much needed TB drugs.
Acting Natpharm managing director Mr Newman Madzikwa also confirmed that oxytocin, which was reported to be in short supply countrywide, was also funded by development partners.
Although Mr Madzikwa said the national drug stocks were improving following the introduction of the Health Levy, he said of late foreign currency shortages remain an impediment to procurements.
Mr Madzikwa said Natpharm had not been getting any allocations in the last two months.
“Since the beginning of the year, we have received about $5,5 million and the last allocation was sometime between May and June.
Mr Madzikwa further explained delays experienced in availing medicines after a tender has been awarded saying pharmaceuticals only produce an order once it has been paid for.
He said in that respect, medicines that are beginning to trickle in the country now were actually procured around June.
He said in light of these challenges, Natpharm was now working on utilising the letter of credit facility from the bank to guarantee payment to suppliers, but the facility is also issued based on availability of foreign currency.
However, Community Working Group on Health executive director Mr Itai Rusike said Government should invest domestic resources into local pharmaceuticals.
“With the coming in of the Health Levy, it is also high time Government begins investing in local pharmaceutical companies not only to ensure availability of drugs at reasonable costs but also to boost their potential.
“While donors give us money, they also expect us to buy from their industries, a situation that further contributes to underdevelopment of not only our country, but Africa as a whole,” said Mr Rusike.
He said currently most WHO accredited pharmaceuticals are from India, China, USA and Europe, yet great need of these pharmaceutical products was in Africa.
Mr Rusike further said reliance on funding partners was also a security threat to the country.
“Imagine if these donors are to pull out completely maybe because of differences in political ideologies where would that leave us as a country. Will the country not be held at ransom using these donations,” said Mr Rusike.
HIV activist Ms Martha Tholanah said by failing to prioritise such critical medications in national budgets, Government was doing a de-service to its citizens.
“Our Government has sold citizens out by placing their health and lives in the hands of donors. Why is there no allocation specifically for essential medicines in the national budget? Why is the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe not fulfilling its promise by releasing the amount of foreign currency that is needed,” she said.
Pan African Treatment Access Movement (PATAM) director, Mr Tapiwanashe Kujinga also expressed concern over continued shortages of critical medicines outlying its implications on efforts to curb drug resistance illnesses.
Mr Kujinga said some of these drug resistant strains, like TB had high mortality rates, hence should be avoided from the beginning.
He said while Zimbabwe has made great strides in coming up with alternative sources of domestic financing through the Health Levy and the National Aids Trust Fund, more needed to be done on transparency and accountability to ensure maximum and effective use of the domestic resources.
He said Government should not only put in place sustainable mechanisms of funding, but also put in place clear structures and budgets on utilisation of those funds.
“As it stand, we do not know what else the Health Levy is funding. “We have been told its now funding costs of blood, dialysis and also drugs but we do not know the actual budgets, its administrative structure or the priority list,” said Mr Kujinga.
Domestic funding has been topical at most international forums, with the donor community advocating for increased domestic funding towards health.
The donors argue that, countries should take charge and responsibility of their challenges with funding partners complementing these efforts.

Govt blasted over TB drugs shortage

THE Community Working Group on Health (CWGH) has blasted government for poor planning, resulting in failure to allocate foreign currency for procurement of tuberculosis (TB) drugs, hence their current shortages.
BY VENERANDA LANGA
CWGH executive director Itai Rusike said the shortages of TB drugs for the past two months would expose patients to health complications, including the deadly and costly drug resistant tuberculosis (DR TB).
“The current shortage of tuberculosis (TB) drugs and other essential medicines in the country’s health institutions is a combination of poor planning, misplaced priorities and a complete dereliction of duty by central government to ensure that every Zimbabwean has access to affordable and quality health care,” he said.
“CWGH is concerned and saddened that for the past two months, TB patients have not been able to access the drugs, exposing them to health complications or even to the development of the deadly and costly drug resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB).”
Rusike further said there was no excuse in failing to procure TB drugs because government had been splurging foreign currency on other sectors instead of prioritising health.
Last week, government was under fire from different quarters over its acquisition of imported vehicles for chiefs and war veterans when the country’s hospitals had no drugs.
“We are alarmed and disheartened that the country reaches a point of running out of TB drugs as if Zimbabwe is on auto-pilot — with no functional government or health ministry that superintends that sector.
“The failure, or perhaps lack of political will, to prioritise funding the health sector gives credence to the widely-held perception that government has been acting that way because most of the political elite are not treated locally, but airlifted abroad, even for minor ailments, at the taxpayer’s expense. Only the poor are ‘treated’ at local clinics where there are no drugs.”
Rusike said while TB was treatable, its dangers were that drug interruptions caused strains like DR-TB that were difficult to treat and worsened the TB and HIV and Aids burden in the country.
Currently, Zimbabwe is depending mostly on donor-funded drugs as government is failing to sufficiently support the health sector through the fiscus.
He said poverty, overcrowding and poorly ventilated living and working conditions were some of the direct factors for TB transmission.
“To end the scourge of TB, the government needs to pursue poverty reduction strategies, reduce food insecurity, improve living and working conditions of its citizens as well as promote healthy diets and lifestyles. This is more urgent and most important in mining, plantations and farming communities where knowledge gaps are wide, poverty is rife while living conditions are deplorable,” he said.

Call to consider the disabled in HIV programmes

Otilia Urengwa (33) of Chipereve village, Zvipani under Chief Dandawa is a disabled mother of five.
BY NHAU MANGIRAZI
In 2005, she was involved in a car accident during which she both her legs were injured and she has been using walking aides ever since.
Like several hundreds of people living with disability, Urengwa’s world is in tatters in this rural outpost 65 kilometres west of Karoi town.
“Persons with disabilities face access barriers to service. As a breastfeeding mother, I am also affected. Those who are infected with HIV are suffering in silence,” she told NewsDay Weekender.
Urengwa’s predicament is fuelled by social and health implications, including impact of HIV and Aids among communities in Hurungwe and Zimbabwe at large.
Makisi Kofi of Hurungwe-based Seka Urema Wafa group confirmed that many of their members were shut out from mainstream community participation by relatives and community leaders.
“People living with disabilities are at times shut out by relatives. Once they are infected or affected with HIV, they become victims of family and societal neglect,” Kofi said.
He has been fighting a lone battle in Hurungwe where he is trying to raise community awareness on the rights of people living with disabilities, which include the right to health, food, water and education.
Community Working Group on Health (CWGH) executive director Itai Rusike admitted that HIV and Aids was a major “socio-economic issue” affecting everyone.
“The risk of HIV and Aids infection is worse for disabled people. Women bear the worst brunt of this pandemic,” he said.
Deaf Zimbabwe Trust (DZT) director Barbara Nyangairi concurred, adding that people living with disabilities faced many challenges.
“These can be physical; from lack of accessible infrastructure and communication barriers for the deaf and blind,” she said, adding that people with hearing impediments often struggled to access counselling and testing.
But Rusike said although they were advocating for major interventions around HIV and Aids prevention, care, support and mitigation, only a few programmes were targetted at disabled people as a “special category”.
“This is so because HIV and Aids services organisations either do not consider disability as their issue, while others say interventions are too costly, especially now where there is global recession. The disabled people’s social exclusion from the mainstream HIV and Aids services makes the situation worse,” he said.
According to National Aids Council (NAC) spokesperson Madeline Dube, coordination of the response to HIV amongst people living with disability has been longstanding.
“Such interventions are not occasional. They are ongoing processes and, with more support, we can do more,” she said.
Nyangairi said cultural, social, religious, economic and environmental factors also affect the disabled people as they do not benefit from programmes aslo meant for them.
Rusike weighed in, saying myths and misconceptions fuelled stigma and discrimination, even among the disabled.
“It is important to carry out advocacy on disability and HIV and Aids as a national cause,” he said.
He said there was evidence of high levels of stigmatisation by communities due to both HIV and Aids.
“However, the disabled stigmatise each other over HIV and Aids and there are elements of self-stigmatisation among disabled. There is lagging attention to PWD who are HIV positive and lack care and knowledge,” he said.
According to Nyangairi, there was limited access to HIV and Aids information and utilisation of services like voluntary counselling and testing and orphans and vulnerable children affected by HIV and Aids as well as people with disabilities due to negative attitudes by service providers.
Nyangairi said it was important for policymakers and development practitioners alike to realise that with roughly 10% of the population living with one form of disability or another, there was need to seriously consider the disabled.
“Disability components must be built in all HIV and Aids development projects,” she said. Rusike also suggested there was need to revisit the approach to dealing with HIV and Aids to ensure the disabled were not overlooked.
“Disabled people are largely overlooked in efforts by the global development community to improve the human welfare and living standards of millions of the world’s poor people,” he said.
But for Urengwa and many like her, impact of HIV and Aids among the disabled remained severe, with no solution in sight.

Forex shortages hits drug imports

ZIMBABWE’s supplies of drugs have been affected by the lack of foreign currency since the country imports about 90 percent of its medicines.
Speaking on the sidelines of a donation at Mpilo Central Hospital yesterday, Ministry of Health and Child Care acting permanent secretary Dr Gibson Mhlanga said 90 percent of the country’s drugs were dependant on foreign currency.
“Unfortunately, we have to buy about 90 percent of our medicines outside the country and with the ongoing forex shortages, we have not been spared from suffering,” he said. “All sectors are scrambling for the limited resources and we are most affected as local production is low and we rely on medication from outside Zimbabwe.”
Dr Mhlanga said following a critical shortage of a TB drug, the country has since secured six months supply of medication.
“We are relieved because we never ran completely out of the drug and we recently received new stock which will last us for six months,” he said.
According to Dr Mhlanga, donors and private organisations have been chipping in to alleviate the situation.
“We are hopeful that things will normalise as time goes on, but we are in dire need of forex and the Reserve Bank has been trying to share the money among all sectors,” he said.
Community Working Group on Health director Mr Itai Rusike said health organisations were still lobbying Government to prioritise the sector in forex allocation. “The major constraint to procurement in 2018 has been the unavailability of foreign currency to procure drugs,” he said. “Foreign currency supplies from the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe can lag behind for as much as four to six months.
“We have been proposing that foreign currency be prioritised for essential drug access or drugs would have to be purchased from private sector suppliers at very high prices. Treatment of chronic diseases is threatened when drugs are not available, undermining treatment compliance.”
A week ago, doctors at Mpilo complained that the public institution had run out of Oxytocin, 50 percent Dextrose and Lignocaine, drugs which are essential during emergencies.
Oxytocin is used to induce labour or strengthen labour contractions during childbirth, and to control bleeding after childbirth.

Civic organisations vow to help ED address health challenges

Thandeka Moyo, Health Reporter
HEALTH based civic organisations have raised optimism on the new administration’s capacity to address prevailing health issues and have pledged to help President-elect Cde Emmerson Mnangagwa ensure Zimbabweans have access to health.

In an open letter to Cde Mnangagwa, the Community Working Group on health, which represents 40 organisations, said they are looking forward to an era where Zimbabweans will have universal health coverage.

Top among the expectations from the CWGH is the revival of primary health care which will ease pressure on central hospitals.

“We are hopeful that the new dispensation will go well beyond the appending of signatures to declarations, but revisit the various declarations over the past 40 years.

“We wish that it will also carry forward what worked and critically analyse why we fell short of health goals which led a significant number of Zimbabweans to ill health, disability and early graves, when all these could be avoided,” said Mr Itai Rusike, the executive director.

The CWGH called on the new government to address the shortage of health personnel by lifting the freeze on employment of health staff.

Mr Rusike said the recently appointed Health Services Board should address the glaring management and governance issues and ensure that the employer of choice for all health workers is central government as obtained in the past.

“We wish to remind the new government that Zimbabwe has never achieved the 15 percent Abuja target since the declaration was signed in 2001,” he said.

Zimbabwe, according to the CWGH, has a target to ensure that 60 percent of specific populations access maternal and child health, AIDS, TB and malaria services.

“We take this opportunity to remind you sir that some Zimbabweans when ill still walk over 30 kilometres to the nearest health facilities to seek treatment especially in the remote locations, farming and resettlement areas.

“Some are transported in wheel barrows and scotch-carts either because there are no ambulances, or service vehicles, and if available, they have no fuel or the roads are impassable,” said Mr Rusike.

The CWGH said there are no adequate nurses, midwives or other trained staff, no medicines, especially for chronic conditions, no gadgets for checking temperatures, blood pressure and other parameters.

“Presently, about 90 percent of medicines used in the public health delivery system in Zimbabwe are funded by donors, a national security threat should the external partners pull the plugs. This also says a lot about how far we are as a country from fully embracing primary health care.

Mr Rusike added: “Infrastructure in hospitals is dilapidated, some is obsolete; medicines and supplies are in short supply; doctors, laboratorians, pharmacists, paramedics and nurses are inadequate and poorly motivated. Measly funding from the national fiscus into the health sector is of major concern.”

He said Zimbabwe needs sustained investments in primary health care to revitalise the health system and close gaps in access to services and to address the causes of ill health.

Mr Rusike bemoaned the high prevalence of preventable diseases and behavioural, lifestyle, environmental, water and sanitation issues.

“The burden of disease like communicable, non-communicable, injuries, HIV, maternal, peri-natal, neglected tropical diseases and cancers is unmatched by the institutional and health staff skills to adequately manage these.

“Therefore, the health system must be strengthened in accordance with the World Health Organisation’s six building blocks,” said Mr Rusike.

“The people’s hopes and health aspirations lie in the new administration.”

The Community Working Group on Health (CWGH) is a network of 40 national membership based civic organisations focusing on advocacy, action and networking around health issues in Zimbabwe. — @thamamoe

Residents to sue council over water

Sibongile Maruta Herald Reporter
Msasa Park residents have instructed the Harare Residents Trust (HRT) to sue Harare City Council for failure to provide them with potable water.

“Residents have instructed the HRT to help them to sue the City of Harare for negligence by failing to provide them with water and increasing their risk of contracting diseases,” said HRT in a statement.

The diseases are associated with absence of clean water and consuming water or food with human excretion.

Msasa Park has gone for a long period without water and the suburb is on high alert after a case of typhoid was recorded at Hatfield Clinic, in the adjacent suburb.

A Msasa Park resident told The Herald yesterday that council had disappointed them.

“Lack of clean water and sanitation has triggered diseases such as typhoid and cholera,” said Mr Garikai Mushowe.

“We are not the only areas suffering, but also places like Chitungwiza, Kuwadzana and Budiriro. We are not happy with the services that we are getting.

“Most of the times we use wells. Harare City Council has failed. There is uncollected garbage and residents have created their own dumping site. We are being charged for services we do not get.”

Community Working Group on Health (CWGH), executive director Itai Rusike said residents were at risk of diseases.

“Unreliable water supplies with cut offs for prolonged periods in Harare mean that people are not accessing adequate water and are resorting to unsafe alternative sources when this happens,” said Mr Rusike.

He said uncollected urban waste was also a matter of concern to residents.

Harare mayor Councillor Bernard Manyenyeni last week cited lack of resources for poor service delivery.

Health rights groups raise red flag over free renal services

COMMUNITY Working Group on Health executive director Itai Rusike has called on government to craft a sustainable funding mechanism in order to provide effective and consistent free renal services at public hospitals.

BY TINOTENDA MUNYUKWI

Itai Rusike
Rusike told NewsDay yesterday that while they commended government’s move to provide free renal dialysis to financially-disadvantaged citizens who are not on medical aid cover, there was need for a clearly outlined long-term and sustainable funding mechanism to ensure that there was continuity.

“The idea is good because we know some patients have been going through some catastrophic expenditure, but what we call for is sustainable long-term funding for this because at the moment, people still have doubts,” Rusike said.

“Government is not clear in terms of long-term sustainable funding for this and we are afraid that this could be mere political grandstanding, so we are saying no because at the end of the day, it is the ordinary citizen that suffers.”

Renal dialysis is a medical procedure to remove waste from bodies of patients experiencing kidney challenges.

The life-saving procedure normally costs between $150 and $200 per session.

Health minister David Parirenyatwa last week disclosed that government was now offering free renal dialysis to disadvantaged patients using money collected under the Health Levy Fund.

“If they are doing this (using the Health Levy Fund), it shows indiscipline on the part of the government because as far as we are concerned, the Health Levy was for purposes of addressing drug shortages and obsolete equipment in our hospitals,” Rusike said.

Citizens Health Watch trustee Fungisai Dube said the move was more of a political policy without any sound financial backing and she called on the government to expeditiously put clear and sound systems instead of selling citizens a dummy.

“The problem is this is more of a political policy without any financial backing. If with the health levy fund we still have no medicines, then how is it going to also fund free renal dialysis?”

Open letter To President Elect ED By The CWGH

The New Government must prioritise strengthening of Primary Health Care to achieve Universal Health Coverage and the Sustainable Development Goals

Now that the elections are over, the people of Zimbabwe expect the fulfilment of the election manifesto, in which you promised massive improvement in health infrastructure; more health personnel; accessible and affordable medicines; free medical care for cancer patients; at least one hospital per district, improved health services in resettlement areas, reduction of hospital fees by 50% and pursuing the Health for All policy, among others.

As Community Working Group on Health (CWGH), we summarize this as primary health care with clear intentions for the attainment of Universal Health Coverage (UHC) and therefore the ustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

For this reason, the CWGH network would like to urge the government to immediately shift focus to real developmental issues, particularly taking into account the dire need of improving health service provision for the benefit of ordinary Zimbabweans as articulated in the pre-elections.

It is undeniable that the deplorable state of the country’s health system requires urgent attention, especially giving priority focus to revitalizing the PHC system and addressing the social determinants of health to achieve UHC, thus enabling every Zimbabwean equitable access to essential quality health services without facing financial hardships. Zimbabwe need sustained investments in primary health care to revitalise the health system to close gaps in access to services and to address the causes of ill health.

Presenetly, infrastructure in hospitals is dilapidated, some is obsolete; medicines and supplies are in short supply; doctors, laboratorians, pharmacists, paramedics and nurses are inadequate and poorly motivated. And this against a background of sustained paltry funding to the sector from national fiscus is of major concern.

The problems in the health sector are compounded by the very high prevalence of largely preventable diseases as well as behaviour, lifestyles, environmental and basic water and sanitation issues.

The quadruple burden of disease, (communicable, non-communicable, injuries, HIV, maternal, peri-natal, neglected tropical diseases, cancers) is unmatched by the institutional and health staff skills to adequatey manage and these have individually or in combination translated into premature and excess mortalities across the ages.

Therefore, the health system must be strengthened in accordance with the World Health Organization’s six building blocks and the over ambitious SDG targets, to respond to this huge burden of disease, and enable the country to reach its full developmental trajectory.

In recent years, many countries have adopted UHC as national policy priority and have committed to directing government funding towards that goal.

Ensuring sustainable progress toward UHC means that Zimbabwe’s public health financing

system must routinely generate sufficient, and largely domestic, resources to achieve health sector objectives within its macroeconomic and fiscal context. It is not only the level of government health spending that matters for sustaining health systems that can meet UHC goals, but also the efficient and equitable use of those funds.

Public budget revenues, as well as the public financing systems that manage those funding flows, therefore play a crucial role in directing money efficiently, equitably and effectively towards UHC goals and other health priorities.

This year marks forty years after the 1978 Declaration of Alma Ata on Primary Health Care which inspired and galvanized understanding, analysis and action on health. In our region, and indeed in this country, the aspirations and content that were included in the 1978 declaration were embedded into liberation movement goals and post independence policies and informed the organisations and transformation of health services.

This largely informed the early adoption of the PHC concept and philosophy at independence and just 2 years post Alma Ata and the subsequent policies on health for all saw Zimbabwe achieving remarkable health indicators just 10-15 years post-independence and assuming a health leader position in the African region.

As CWGH we see a semblance of the same energy, and are therefore hopeful that the new leadership will take us from Alma Ata, to the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), to Abuja and all the way to the SDGs within the next 5 years.

We are hopeful that the new dispensation will go well beyond the appending of signatures to declarations, but revisit the various declarations over the past 40 years, and carry forward what worked but critically analyze why we fell short of health goals and thus sent a significant number of Zimbabweans to ill health, disability and early graves, when all these could be avoided.

Zimbabwe needs a renewed commitment to health and well-being for all based on UHC and should locate PHC as a necessary foundation to achieve UHC. Our focus is thus on UHC as the end and PHC as the means.

We call for an economic order that would serve the attainment of health and reduce inequalities in health nationally, while also recognizing that the promotion and protection of people’s health in both public and private sectors is essential for socio-economic development.

The CWGH strongly reaffirms the full definition of health as articulated at the formation of the WHO that health, which is a state of complete physical, mental and social wellbeing, and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity, is a fundamental human right and that the attainment of the highest possible level of health is a most important world-wide social goal whose realization requires the action of many other social and economic sectors in addition to the health sector.

The CWGH calls on the new government to urgently address the proximal determinants of the health of all Zimbabweans including but not limited to shortage of health personnel by unreservedly lifting the freeze on employment of health staff, and rationalizing the balance of clinical and support staff. We are energized by the new board at the helm and sincerely hope that the Health Services Board (HSB) hit the ground running.

The new board must address the glaring management and governance issues and ensure that the employer of choice for all health workers is central government as obtained in the past. Managing a professional workforce requires skill and capacity that we find missing in the public health sector and this largely accounts for the mass exodus of our highly trained health workers to offer their young productive lives elsewhere.

Furthermore, these workers require the tools of the trade, which in turn must be effectively and efficiently managed, be they infrastructure, medicines, equipment, ambulances, service vehicles, and new technologies to make their work less tedious than it currently is.

However, all this can be achieved if the government increases national budgetary funding for the health sector, which also comes with fixing the current constipated economic fundamentals.

We wish to remind the new government that Zimbabwe has never achieved the 15% Abuja target since the declaration was signed in 2001, and to also point out that the target then was to ensure at least 60% access to specific populations in the country to access maternal and child health, AIDS, TB and malaria, services which such as plaster, wound care, the capacity at local level may not be there.

This means Zimbabweans are being denied their right to health although Section 76 of the Constitution clearly states that: “Every citizen and permanent resident of Zimbabwe has the right to have access to basic health care services, including reproductive health-care services”.

To this end we implore you, Your Excellency and the new government to take heed of the WHO’s six building blocks of an effective health delivery system, whereby the services need to be tailored to the needs of specific population groups. Many public health programmes do not have or are not reaching their health equity goals because they not only lack specific interventions but also fail to reach marginalized populations.

In Zimbabwe, community health structures exist to assist in health promotion and provision of health services. We have supported governance structures from the Health Centre Committees, District Mnagement Teams and the Public Health Advisory Board, and the Parliamentary Portfolio Committee on Health at national level.

However, as the country embraces SDGs and therefore UHC, there has to be a policy on integration and movement from the programme and donor-based approach to health programming to a comprehensive and nationwide coverage of health interventions. Community-Based Workers — Village Health Workers, Community Based Distributors, Home Based Care Workers, Youth and Women’s Affairs and Envirnmental Health Technicians — must all be trained in both UHC and the SDGs for full community participation in health and development agenda.

We therefore urge the govermnet to fundamentally support and strengthen the role of local leadership and community structures for health interventions to bear fruit. It is risky and unsustainable for a country to depend substantially on external partners as donors can withdraw financial support anytime should their interests shift for some reasons.

The Paris Declaration on aid effectiveness refers. None of the donors have kept their part of the bargain, none have nationwide reach and this is why our health indicators have plummeted over the years.

Despite these shortcomings from the donor community, presently, about 90% of medicines used in

the public health delivery system in Zimbabwe are funded by donors, a national security threat should the external partners pull the plugs.

This also says a lot about how far we are as a country from fully embracing PHC and therefore our progress towards UHC. Your new government, Your Excellency, therefore needs to design and implement new and innovative domestic health financing policies to fund a strengthened primary

health care strategy to achieve UHC.

We have over the years proffered several options and strategies that Zimbabwe can explore for innovative mobilization of resources building on best practices in global health financing to boost public spending on health without undermining fiscal sustainability.

These include decentralisation and devolution with increased transfers from the central government to local governments and peripheral health facilities on the basis of needs and performance as well as the establishment of a mandatory national health insurance system including cross-subsidies from richer to poor categories.

To this end we implore you, Your Excellency to continue the Diaspora engagement you started under ”Zimbabwe is open for business” in bringing back remittances in support for the revitalization of the health delivery system and the technical expertise through mentorships and skills transfer programme to strengthen the same system that was weakened by their departure. This calls for heightened management and governance capacity at the national and sub-national levels for accountability, transparency but also importantly effectiveness and efficiency in utilizing the mobilized financial, other material and human resources.

CWGH believes that addressing the country’s onerous health challenges requires total political commitment to implementing the primary health care concept to achieve universal health coverage to ensure that every Zimbabwean enjoys his/her right to health.

The people’s hopes and health aspirations lies in the new administration.

Remember, you will be judged by what you promised, Your Excellency, but we stand ready to continue working with you and with all well-meaning Zimbabweans towards our shared goal of achieving UHC and the SDGs.

This letter was written by Itai Josh Rusike in his capacity as the Executive Director for Community Working Group on Health (CWGH)

Health sector piles pressure on ED

STAKEHOLDERS in the health sector have started piling pressure on President-elect Emmerson Mnangagwa to honour his pledge of improving infrastructure, drug supplies and staffing levels at public health institutions.

BY PHYLLIS MBANJE

Community Working Group on Health (CWGH) director Itai Rusike said the new government should prioritise strengthening of primary health care to achieve Universal Health Coverage (UHC) and attaining the sustainable development goals.

“Now that the elections are over, the people of Zimbabwe expect the fulfilment of the election manifesto, in which you promised free medical care for cancer patients; at least one hospital per district, improved health services in resettlement areas, reduction of hospital fees by 50% and pursuing the Health for All policy, among others,” Rusike said.

He added that the deplorable state of the country’s health system required urgent attention so as to ensure equitable access to essential quality health services.

“Zimbabwe needs sustained investments in primary health care to revitalise the health system to close gaps in access to services and to address the causes of ill-health,” Rusike said.

Most public hospitals are in a sorry state with dilapidated and obsolete infrastructure while drugs and medical staff are always in short supply.

“And this, against a background of sustained paltry funding to the sector from national fiscus, is of major concern.
The problems in the health sector are compounded by the very high prevalence of largely preventable diseases as well as behaviour, lifestyles, environmental and basic water and sanitation issues,” Rusike said.

He said it was unsustainable in the long run to have donor funding almost 90% of the health sector’s requirements.

“Your new government, Your Excellency, therefore, needs to design and implement new and innovative domestic health financing policies to fund a strengthened primary health care strategy to achieve UHC.

“We have over the years proffered several options and strategies that Zimbabwe can explore for innovative mobilisation of resources building on best practices in global health financing to boost public spending on health without undermining fiscal sustainability,” the CWGH boss said.